This schism had a profound effect on the events that followed in the denomination. |
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But I divine far more complex forces than mere aesthetic preferences lurking behind this oddly impassioned schism. |
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He called for more effort on the part of all statesmen, politicians and church leaders to resolve the schism in the Orthodox church. |
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Although he survived the motion, it caused a schism in the government and among coalition partners. |
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For him to spurn the former first lady would be to cause a schism in the party. |
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At a time when new dangers and crises are proliferating rapidly, this schism could have serious consequences. |
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The unpleasantness of this schism seems to have had a salutary effect on Tennent, who was more responsible for it than anyone else. |
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Baptists rallied around the confession and for the moment schism was avoided, but peace for Southern Baptists was ephemeral. |
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The schism between the churches was finalized in 1204 when crusaders captured Constantinople. |
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Europe was suffering under the Black Death, and the papal schism had brought political and theological upheaval. |
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During the schism, and ensuing confusion, the money from the gates was down, so the church decided to get rid of one of its heads. |
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Two models of denominational affiliation continue to frame most sociological analyses of the schism. |
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It is only in recent years that the dialogue between the two Churches to heal the schism has been effectively re-opened. |
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Though the title of this new exhibition flirts with the idea of schism, the truth is more banal. |
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Schoenberg opened the flood gates of creative invention and, along the way, may have driven a schism between composers and their audiences. |
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In the late twentieth century, this schism would finally open into an abyss. |
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Such controversy, he told The Advocate, is no longer likely to lead to a church schism. |
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Since that time, with the exception of brief intervals, the Bulgarian Church has persisted in schism. |
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After this schism it became fully independent and is today in the rare situation of being headed by a female, an 85 year old Imperatrix. |
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The church would even suffer its first schism and be reduced from seventy-eight to sixty-six members. |
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The move threatens to create a schism in the Church, pitting modernisers against traditionalists. |
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A dangerous schism in the Russian party developed with the emergence of the view known as Economism. |
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The debate was described by some as a generational schism within the profession. |
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Surely this must produce a deep schism in a sense between science and Buddhism from the very beginning? |
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Even beyond indies vs. studio films, there became a schism at the studios. |
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As a homogeneous society, it has been spared the Shia-Sunni schism that is sundering Syria and Iraq. |
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Nevertheless, Frederick's support was sufficient to give life to the schism. |
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Meanwhile, schism had begun to sunder the ranks, yet without shaking the confidence of the Disciples in their plea for union. |
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When the conclave at the third scrutiny elected Gioacchino Pecci to the tiara as Leo XIII, the schism between the papacy and the Italian government widened. |
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It raises the ill humour of mankind, excites the keener spirits, moves indignation in beholders and sows the very seeds of schism in men's bosoms. |
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Perhaps Ukip will slice the rightwing vote in two, leaving the nearest left-leaning candidate open to exploit the schism. |
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After this terrible week, it would be foolish to deny the dangers that can arise from this ancient schism. |
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Kosovo's declaration of independence has also exposed a schism amongst Member States. |
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This material schism led way to disunion within the kingdom. |
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Aberdeen, perched on the North Sea, offers a perfect example of the schism between the top and bottom earners. |
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The schism in Wisconsin was the first crack in the Republican Party's hegemony. |
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Instead, journalists reached back to an earlier Republican schism from the days of Ulysses S. Grant. |
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But they did not think a schism inside the PKK would lead to such a killing. |
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A further schism developed among those favoring the colony's existence. |
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Or the emotional schism caused by choosing between two parents? |
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Internal schism and instability led to Roman invasion and occupation. |
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However, the stress she places on their emergence because of, not in spite of, a schism in the cultural industry ignores their colonized positions. |
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But the vote will drive many from the church and risks schism. |
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Instead of having a lawful and real Primate, we will recognize one that is uncanonical, born of schism, sullied by sergianism and ecumenism, and therefore without Grace. |
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The result was a government immobilized by fear of schism and unable to respond to a real opportunity to develop a better relation with the minority community. |
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Besides the schism, the western church was riven by theological controversies, some of which turned into heresies. |
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A schism was avoided in July 1885 when professionalism was formally legalised in English football. |
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Negotiations for union of the eastern and western churches, which had been in a state of schism since 1054, soon got under way. |
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Nearly a century later, the university was at the centre of a Protestant schism. |
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The new House of Commons had more Conservative than Whig members, but the depth of the Tory schism enabled Russell to continue to govern. |
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A number of small Presbyterian denominations have arisen since the 1950s through migration or schism. |
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Because of the schism the Orthodox no longer recognize the primacy of the pope. |
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For a list of individuals involved in the Brethren movement before the 1848 schism, see the Plymouth Brethren article. |
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Thus, there is an unresolved schism between science and practice. |
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It's rather like the schism between the eastern and the western churches. |
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All the above characteristics are enough for Tunisia to be prone to becoming a democracy where the rule of law prevails in order to ensure dignity, freedom and progress to all citizens, without fear of schism or chaos. |
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In many countries, there is a growing schism between those in high-quality, well-paid employment and those in poorly remunerated, insecure jobs with low levels of social protection. |
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There will be no way of arresting a schism with such Pharisaic intransigence rampant. |
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When certain bodies within churches, and whole bodies of churches themselves denominationally, decide to alter that, then they go into schism, and we are in a society that is itself entirely in schism. |
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But then there has always been a schism, on all sides, between the precision of our reasons for going into Afghanistan and the mistiness of our reasons for staying. |
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Joe Clark returned as leader, but the schism with the Reformers effectively watered down the combined Blue and Red Tory vote in Canada. |
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This led to a schism between those clergy who swore the required oath and accepted the new arrangement and those who remained loyal to the Pope. |
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This tension shaped the sports of association football and cricket, and led to the schism between the two main forms of rugby. |
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However, this very looseneess of kyai leadership structure has promoted schism. |
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In this schism, the papacy had returned to Rome from Avignon, but an antipope was installed in Avignon, as if to extend the papacy there. |
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These conflicts led to further schism, for example in the creation of the Reformed Episcopal Church in North America. |
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A bishop who goes in schism or is cast out of office due to heresy does not take his Apostolic Succession with him as a private possession. |
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Pope Leo XIII instructed the Archbishop of Manila, Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa to excommunicate those who initiated the schism. |
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Many saints canonized by Rome after the 1902 schism are not recognized by the Aglipayan church and its members. |
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A similar schism to that which occurred in England took place in Sydney, Australia. |
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Celestine approved the council's decision to anathematize, depose, and banish Nestorius, which caused a schism that remained unresolved for more than a century. |
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Although the schism was eventually healed in 1417, the papacy's spiritual authority had suffered greatly. |
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Khoury said the schism within the Maronite community in Lebanon is weakening its role in Lebanese politics. |
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In the letter issued with its declaration, the Congregation expressed its appreciation to Archbishop Prendergast for the many efforts taken in an effort to avoid schism. |
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It includes her sixteen mystical visions and contemplations on universal love and hope in a time of plague, religious schism, uprisings and war. |
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She doesn't believe that web series are done for, but rather that a schism is forming that will see online content becoming more like traditional film. |
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He is able to talk without rancour of the schism between himself and the minister for public works in the New South Wales government, Davis Hughes. |
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The Society of Friends underwent a major schism in 1828, splitting Hicksite Friends, followers of Elias Hicks, from the Orthodox. |
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Charles I's accession also marked the beginning of an intense schism between King and Parliament. |
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Actually, there seems to be a stunning connection between the unhealthy fear of passively causing a schism, and the current intense unpopularity of legitimate defence and the death penalty. |
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An episcopal ordination lacking a pontifical mandate raises the danger of a schism, since it jeopardises the unity of the College of Bishops with the Pope. |
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Though the schism was reconciled, unresolved issues would lead to further division. |
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Although this occurred after the death of Leo IX, the outbreak of the formal schism correctly belongs to his pontificate, which in several ways therefore marked a caesura in the history of the papacy in medieval times. |
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Another major schism, the Reformation, resulted in the splintering of the Western Christendom into several branches. |
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The delegates at the council managed to end the papal schism. |
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In the 1850s a schism developed among the membership of the Cambrians. |
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This broad difference in approach led to a major schism among Buddhist monastics in about the 4th century BCE, creating the Early Buddhist Schools. |
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Eventually, Pope Pelagius II ordained Gregory a deacon and solicited his help in trying to heal the schism of the Three Chapters in northern Italy. |
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However, this schism was not healed until well after Gregory was gone. |
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The new humanist learning had been hitherto looked on with suspicion in Rome, a possible source of schism and heresy from an unhealthy interest in paganism. |
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Virtually from the start, the test sparked a schism in social psychology. |
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The old schism of Federal and Republican threatened nothing, because it existed in every State, and united them together by the fraternism of party. |
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The same can be said of the next generations of artists, those who anteceded Dubuffet and whose work accepts the face-body schism as a fait accompli. |
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Following the death of Mathews Mar Athanasius, the suffragan succeeded as the Metropolitan of the Malankara See in 1877 which led to a schism in the Malankara church. |
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The last pope to resign, Gregory XII, did so nearly 600 years ago as part of complex negotiations to end a 40-year schism between popes at Rome and antipopes at Avignon. |
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